Headless body murder trial jurors told they can consider manslaughter charge
Tap above to watch video report by Ronke Phillips
Jurors have been told they can consider if a north London woman cut off her vulnerable friend’s head and disposed of the body, but had not meant to kill her.
Judge Richard Marks told jurors on Friday that they could consider Jemma Mitchell, 38, face a lesser charge of manslaughter of her devout Christian friend.
Mitchell is accused of murdering 67-year-old Mee Kuen Chong, known as Deborah, at her home in Wembley, north London, before wheeling her body away in a large suitcase on 11 June last year.
Judge Marks said: “It is not the case for either the prosecution or the defence that the defendant is guilty of manslaughter as opposed to murder.
“The prosecution say this is a case of premeditated murder and that is the reason why the defendant took the suitcase with her to the house on 11 June – ie for the purpose of removing the body.
“The defence on the other hand say that the prosecution have failed to prove that Deborah Chong was unlawfully killed and then, even if you conclude that she was, they have failed to prove that she was unlawfully killed by the defendant.”
Mitchell allegedly dumped Ms Chong’s headless corpse more than 200 miles away in woodland near Salcombe, Devon, 15 days after the attack.
Prosecutors allege that she was motivated by money.
They say she faked her friend's will in order to be left cash to pay for repairs to her dilapidated home in Willesden.
Mitchell has denied murdering Ms Chong but declined to give evidence in her defence.
“The defence on the other hand say that the prosecution have failed to prove that Deborah Chong was unlawfully killed and then, even if you conclude that she was, they have failed to prove that she was unlawfully killed by the defendant.”
The judge raised the evidence of the pathologist Dr Deborah Cook and what the jury could conclude from possible explanations for Ms Chong’s head fracture.
The pathologist had said Ms Chong’s head injury could have been caused by a blow with a weapon or a violent push.
In either event, the jury could consider Mitchell guilty of manslaughter if she killed Ms Chong but did not intend to cause her really serious harm.
The judge added: “That would be the case even if she subsequently cut off Deborah Chong’s head and then disposed of the body.”
He told jurors it was a circumstantial case with no witnesses to Ms Chong’s death.
Circumstantial evidence could be “powerful” but needed to be examined with care, and speculation played no part in the process, he said.
Jurors could consider that Mitchell told various lies but they should not assume they meant she “must be guilty”, the judge said.
Examples allegedly included providing a false name and address to a taxi firm and lying about how she injured her finger on 11 June last year.
The judge said defendants sometimes told lies out of “panic or fear or because they think that their genuine explanation may not be believed”.
On Mitchell’s failure to go into the witness box, Judge Marks said: “You must not jump to the conclusion that her silence proved the case against her. It does not.”
But he added: “It is open to you to conclude that the reason why the defendant remained silent is that in truth that she had no answer to the prosecution case or none that she thought would stand up in cross-examination.”
The trial at the Old Bailey was adjourned until Monday.
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